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y^b w^3 tempernture^m t~*^ii^^^b becoming / k m i r <: - n ~'-' m m szâ€”rl[j7 highest 77 â– *â– â– 'â€ž avera 8e 70 Chicago examiner within a short wai refreshing car ride orh are offered you in to-dah vol ix no 215 a m tuesday tuesday august 29 1911 14 pages n i.^t&'f.hc price one trust funds go to canada to beat pact unlimited cash now in hands of conservatives and boiler plate factory is busy wall st man as agent whidder graham publicist beaten at washington now writes the heavy articles montreal que aug 28 1n the fight to a driving finish which the opponents of reciprocity are making throughout can - ada every one of the charges that trust funds from the united states are the mainstay in the fight are being borne out by the facts specifically it is known positively that three weeks ago a big sum of money was handed over to representatives of the con servative party who are seeking to over throw the laurier government and defeat the pact as much more as might be found necessary was promised at the same time this information was secured to day from a man who knows and whose name is withheld for obvious reasons it could be given if necessary but cor roborative proof is at hand without re vealing the source of the information whidder graham is engaged in writing for the montreal star a series of letters against reciprocity based on the last ditch argument graham a trust agent mr graham needs no introduction he ls well-known in new york also in wash ington he may be identified as the mr | . graham of the well-known wall street pub licity firm of allen & graham exposed at the reciprocity hearings before the senate finance committee at washington as the k gentleman who under the pay of the paper trust the woolen trust and allied interests was making the fight of the farmers against the approval of the pact by the congress of the congress of the united states beaten at washington on the farmer issue the trusts have now centered their efforts on the fight ln canada where as the examiner predicted they would the pxation cry is being used to encompass lefeat of reciprocity lldder graham writes to canadians former citizen of the dominion he trong on the danger of annexation gh some attention is also given to the ests of the suffering farmer and > are many indications that the same arguments that were advanced in the united states against reciprocity on the ground that it would benefit the canadian farmer against his brother ln the states _ re now being revamped and used to illus m irate how reciprocity will absolutely ruin the canadian farmer to the net profit of his brother south of the border the chief point to be observed however is that the firm of allen & graham are again at work paper lumber and beef interested during the reciprocity fight in the united states on the sworn testimony of mr allen they were in the pay of the paper trust who is paying them now that is the question that canadian citizens are asking it is known that allen & gfc-aham have sumptuous wall street offices located not far from the headquarters of the paper trust and the paper trust is im mensely interested in the defeat of the reciprocity pact they are certainly not in the pay of the liberal party here the paper trust the lumber trust and the fceef trust do not announce in advance that at a certain hour in a certain place they win hand over cash or a check to the representative of the conservative party of canada the incidental facts must therefore be examined closely among these are that the paper trust on general principles wants reciprocity beaten the lumber trust spe cifically wants to save the 1.50 tariff on lumber which reciprocity will wine out patent insides factory busy side by side with these two salient facts there are to be considered these striking coincidences allen and graham who were paid by the trusts to work up anti-reci procity in the united states are now en gaged in the same test in canada through whidder graham a former resident of the dominion for fifteen years the conservative party in canada has struggled along without an issue or a campaign fund now it has both with annexation as the war cry there is money on all sides a certain alleged eews agency in montreal is working night and day lining out boiler plate or patent insides for the country newspapers the bi are filled with conservative ertising there is plenty of music hall posters and a good t for bringing out the vote on y b recalled that the examiner iu lispatch from washington point eral weeks ago that with abun y from the trust in the united fight here would be made on _ kaiser near wreck in royal train 30 are hurt few yards away crash startles passengers in royal j coach mistaken signal is the cause special cabla to the examiner berlin aug 28 the kaiser narrowly escaped being mixed up in a railroad ac cident last night while traveling from hamburg to stettin . when the royal train arrived at lue beck station at midnight it was held up for half an hour owing to a change of staff a mistake was made in signals causing an incoming train to crash at full speed into another train which was stand ing in the station only a few yards from the kaiser's special every one aboard the royal train was awakened by the crash and quickly leaped ont of bed the electric lights were switched on and inquiries made as to what had happened after satisfying himself that no one was seriously injured the kaiser ordered his special to proceed three carriages of the wrecked train were totally demolished and the thirty passengers occupying them were injured but there were no fatalities fire routs 200 guests morning blaze in furniture store ad joining hotel two hundred scantily clad guests of the new columbus hotel 1840 wabash avenue were driven in a panic to the streets at 1:30 o'clock this morning when flames de stroyed the rear of the l fish furniture company's building next door within a moment after the alarm was sounded the flames hnd swept through a large heap of excelsior stored on the second floor of the building and mounted toward the roof more than fifty women occupied rooms in the hotel several of them were assisted to the street by firemen one fireman , was slightly injured by falling glass | Chicago train is wrecked b & o flyer from new york jumps track near pittsburgh pittsburgh pa aug 28.-a west bound passenger train on the baltimore & ohio railroad which left new york early to-day for Chicago jumped the tracks at round bottom terrace forty miles east of pittsburgh the train consisted of a mail car a combination baggage and dynamo car three day coaches two pullmans and a dining car a special train carrying doc tors was sent from connellsville late to night w p calvert a mail clerk was cut a c dremer train electrician and w r doebler express messenger were injured the escape of the passengers from death or injury is most remarkable astor doesn't pay taxes suit filed to foreclose lien for 891 on new york property new york aug 28 a supreme court action to foreclose a hen for unpaid taxes amounting to 891 against john jacob astor was filed to-day the tenant of the property which ls located at one hundred and sixty-fourth street and jerome ave nue failed to pay the taxes the lease ex pired and the tx lien was sold to the tax lien company the property in question came into astor's hands as executor at his father's estate turkey's war head ill special cable to the examiner constantinople aug 28 shevkct pasha the minister of war is sick of what the sultan's physician has diagnosed to be intestinal catarrh another physician diag nosed the disease as cholera which has been prevailing here for some time mrs davy arrested again for taxi bill explaining worthless check j she talks of reopening divorce case just learned of decree pleads that she had right to draw on bank for allowance for the second time this year mrs nel lie l davy was arrested last night on a charge of failing to pay a taxicab bill her explanation of the tendering of a worthless check for her second ride in cluded the statement that she might at tempt to reopen a divorce case in which f d davy obtained a decree from judge pinckney on january 10 f d davy is an agency manager of the continental casualty company in chi cago according to mrs davy he is a member of the Chicago athletic colonial and south shore country clubs he lives at 1847 lawndale avenue mrs davy since her divorce has earned her living as a corset demonstrator husband obtained divorce although davy's divorce was granted january 10 his wife when arrested on january 23 on complaint of g d moore a taxicab owner said that she had been driving about in search of her husband and that their home was at 4028 calumet ave nue her arrest last night resulted from the s eturn marked no funds of a check for 10 she had given to the hoskins taxi service 50 east twentieth street mrs davy when locked up said that she had been allowed 10 a week alimony by her former husband and that she had been told to draw it by check from the colonial trust savings bank similar checks had been honored she said talks of reopening case i she said further that she had not learned until three weeks ago that her husband had obtained a divorce a friend told her she said she said she was out of the city when the decree was granted and talked of making an effort through her attorney george a trude to have the case re opened unless some more satisfactory ali mony arrangement could be made a con ference to this end would be held this morning she said between attorney trude and her husband mrs davy is a daughter of e w gordon a retired business man of oak park dr hirsch sees war peril chicagoan believes situation in ger many grave special cable to the examiner berlin aug 28 dr emil g hirsch of Chicago who has been spending his annual vacation in europe believes that europe is much nearer the verge of a great war than most people realize the atmos phere of berlin is charged with gunpow der said dr hirsch to-day there seems to be little confidence felt that the moroc can negotiations to be resumed here this week will amount to anything the ger mans seem to be more incensed at the brit ish than at the french the papers here reek with anglophobism i consider the situation grave miss barrymore in peril actress her husband and baby in auto accident bristol r 1 aug 28 russell c colt his wife ethel barrymore and their infant child samuel pomeroy colt nar rowly escaped injury in an automobile here when the forward axle of their tour ing car snapped tipping the car over the chauffeur applied the brake but the mo mentum caused the car to plow through the roadbed twenty-flve feet it stopped five feet from an electric pole pope receives officials recovery almost complete and sec retary leaves for vacation special cable to the examiner rome aug 28 pope pius to-day re ceived in audience cardinal vannutelll and the archbishop of yucatan his holiness having almost completely recovered his strength cardinal merry del val the papal secretary of state has left rome for a two-weeks vacation t a edison near death special cable to the examiner interlaken switzerland aug 28 that thomas a edison and his family narrowly escaped being dashed over an alpine precipice near the village of tou bois became known when the party arrived here to-night from geneva the driver of the inventor's automobile attempted to turn around on a narrow road while as cending a steep hill he lost control of the machine and it started down the in cline with the rear wheels on the very edge of a fifty-foot abyss the chauffeur managed to whirl the steering wheel about so as to arrest the car's progress boy 14 routs sluggers hammond ind aug 28 sluggers at tacked carpenters at work on a building southeast of the city and were repulsed by harry engl.ehardt aged fourteen years who was armed with a winchester re peater _ . _. 14 year-old girl foils a burglar choked in sleep makes him weep aided by bulldog brings help miss cheryl gaston miss cheryl gaston talking in sleep causes thief to think he's seen how a fourteen-year-old school miss dealt with a burglar reduced him to a state of tearfulness and then forced him to leave the ho-ise without appropriating even one article of value was the amazing story told by cheryl gaston daughter of mrs nellie dewey gaston 557 barry avenue yesterday . the young bandit entered the gaston ipartmeat at 2 o'clock sunday morning and there spent the most interesting thirty minutes of his life he himself was cool but he found that he was dealing with a spartan and he retired vanquished raffles and other bizarre stage bur glars will turn green with envy when thry read of the young bandit who had the effrontery to roll a cigarette before he re tired from the scene of his wonderful dep redations that is a fierce-looking english bulldog and a timid woman lodger enters into the story detracts nothing from the interest of the tale it should be stated first of all that cheryl talks in her sleep the gaston flat is on the ground floor at the corner of evanston and barry avenues th burglar chose cheryl's window to make his entrance he carefully removed the screen carried it half a block down the street and then stood in the dark bed room cheryl spoke and he thought he had been discovered without a moment's hesitation he grasped her by the throat then she was really wide awake but frighteued never you are choking me please let go of my throat she pleaded ail right if you will promise me that you wfll tot scream i will let you go said th gentleman burglar i promise said cheryl just then mike a big hrindle eng lish bulldog came rolling menacingly into the room if that dog bites me i will kill you chattered the bandit apprehensively i won't let htm said cheryl bravely and she put a reassuring â€¢ hand on towsci-'s head he wagged his stump of a tail and licked the burglar's grimy hand only women lodgers were in the hous the little girl knew that she had to think quickly and surely how could she raise au alarm then i thought 1 ought to get to the kitchen she iid telling her expert ence last night so i said i am so thirty i can hardly lireathe will you please get me a jrink of water sure you come to the kitchen refuses aid to boy maimed by her auto city-wide hunt for owner of the machine saio to be no 3507 Illinois the police are making a statewide search for a woman who refused aid to a boy whom her automobile had knocked down in the streets of Chicago late sunday night and who ordered her chauffeur to drive away after he had stopped the car and attempted to pick up the child the license number of the car was said to be 3507 Illinois this number was is sued to a john c fetzer of hoopeston john & fetzer of hinsdale who was at first said to be the owner of the automo bile said last night that his machine was not out of the garage at the time of the accident the victim of the accident was rhine hardt gresch seven years old 2818 chris tian avenue he was crossing the street at 2801 milwaukee avenue wheu an auto mobile driven at a tremendous rate of speed struck him before he was aware of his danger the chauffeur stopped his machine when he saw the boy go under the wheels he jumped to the pavement and went back to his victim's assistance the moment he picked up the lad a woman who was riding alone in the ton neau ordered him to return to the car let him remain where he is she screamed we have got to get out of this the driver climbed back into his ma chine put on full speed and disappeared before spectators could interfere the gresch boy was severely bruised and lacerated and internal injuries are feared -â– Â» , beattle confessed killing unknown swears cousin threat's kiel beulah binford unknown â€” ~ ~~~ b poor relation of a wealthy virginia^^sffh tells of buying gun for alleged skyeh and how the prisoner expressed xegrek for deed ; fear defendant kill selm the fatal words that may^send henry clay i beattie to the electric chair henry this looks kind of black for you mt paul beattie io his cousin henry the night of the tragedy i v i wish to god i hadn't done it i wouldn't 1 do it again for a million dollars â€” henry's reply to paul that same night he gave me a message he said go to her beulah binford and tell her that if she calls me up or opens her mouth or says anything about this affair i'll kill her if it takes me 100 years â€” paul's recital of what followed the confession of the murder girl for whom crime is said to have been done is i declared to have said now he'll marry me i mother of slain young woman says she knew j of husband's wrongdoings â€¢ i by j j o'neill chesterfield va aug 2s late in this stifling afternoon while s_fi . 1 persons crowded this tiny ancient room built to seat 100 henry clay 1 beattie jr on trial for his life sat with a sneer on his face watch _ ing his cousin paul beattle testifying against him j paul of the poor branch of the family had always been regarded as j an inferior person henry had many times used him as an errand boy and 1 him small sums of money paul is at times subject to epilepsy he is â– physically weak uncultured in all outward ways far below the rich youth m who is charged with having slain his wife for love of a prettier woman â– the much-talked-of beulah binford â„¢ nothing new had come from tie cousin's testimony he had told how he had been commissioned by his cousin henry to buy the shotgun with which henry's bride was slain â€” whie hwa sold he told of having delivered the weapon to his cousin â€” also old the audience fanned itself mopped its face and forehead with hand kerchiefs and listened in a bored sort of way state's attorney louis wen denberg droned along with questions which bothered neither the young de fendant nor his lawyers and excited neither spectators nor jurors they had read all this stuff in newspapers it was ancient history admission startles whole court and so you went on the night of the tragedy to henry beauie's house and met him on the porch inquired wendenberg quietly and you sal to him henry this looks kind of black for you well what did he say la reply " _ wish to god i hadn't done it â€” i wouldn't do it over again for a million dollars that's what he said sir replied paul as they caught the flrst half of the sentence every one in the courtroom stopped all motion as though suddenly petrified there was not a ware of a fan or a hat not a movement of a handkerchief the boy prisoner's face went as white as paper his fists doubled in a convulsive grip his lawyers the judge the jurors half started in their seats then halted in statue-like poses as the last half of the sentence was uttered the reaction jama them was a sound that is not quite describable â€” a sudden in-take of breathâ€”a sound just the opposite of a hiss if that wording can be understood â€” a gnat k gasp jfl then a man standing behind the little grand stand-like arrangement la m which the correspondents sit said quite aloud and quite unconsciously good god so henry if this is to be believed has confessed __â– his own lawyers apparently had not known of it nor had his irhiam haired father nor his brother douglas who sat beside him they iblsfl palm leaf fans to their faces none could tell what tears they shed w_fl emotions they expressed behind those screens 9 only henry himself failed to relax he remained rigid^h unmoving with his pale face and his clenched fist : nd his staring eyes directed straight before him then came second thunderbolt but that was not all there was in paul beattie's story lo cause breaths to jerk inward bodies to tauten in a mazed shock the calm ouiet lawyer for the state of virginia asked very soon and so you say he gave you a message to deliver did he paul yes sir â€” that night he gave me a message and what was it paul _ he said go to her beulah binford and tell her that if a she calls me up or opens her mouth or says anything about m this affair i'll kill her if it takes me 100 years " m first the confession of the killing then the admission that it wajft^p beulah binford surely the state was damning young henry clay beattie / more and more oniy one thing else was lacking that eoon came / and did you deliver that message paul / he delivei-ed it the boy said he went to beulah binford's housei but there were others about they dared not talk so he took her for _ short walk on the streets to tell her what h enry had said beulah binford's he'll marry me j and what did she say paul m why she said i reckon henry clay will marry me afterifl this right then in the opinion of all hearers the state of virginia migfl have rest case â€” right then when the young defendant tried to sqa again but showed only plain fright when half tha jurors sat tigh^b continued on 2 page 2d column j get the gold outn | of your newspaper read the examiner want ads and you will find hundreds of ways to get good bright round dollars out of them every want ad is printed for the convenience of at least two parties â€” the one who advertises and the person who seeks what is advertised > if there is anything lacking for your convenience such as a po sition or help for the home or office or a flat in a more desir able neigheborhood it can be quickly supplied through these want ad pages h _Â« Chicago examiner 1 want ad office j no 9 w madison street 1 just west of state street j i phone main 5000 auto 44344 j

y^b w^3 tempernture^m t~*^ii^^^b becoming / k m i r are many indications that the same arguments that were advanced in the united states against reciprocity on the ground that it would benefit the canadian farmer against his brother ln the states _ re now being revamped and used to illus m irate how reciprocity will absolutely ruin the canadian farmer to the net profit of his brother south of the border the chief point to be observed however is that the firm of allen & graham are again at work paper lumber and beef interested during the reciprocity fight in the united states on the sworn testimony of mr allen they were in the pay of the paper trust who is paying them now that is the question that canadian citizens are asking it is known that allen & gfc-aham have sumptuous wall street offices located not far from the headquarters of the paper trust and the paper trust is im mensely interested in the defeat of the reciprocity pact they are certainly not in the pay of the liberal party here the paper trust the lumber trust and the fceef trust do not announce in advance that at a certain hour in a certain place they win hand over cash or a check to the representative of the conservative party of canada the incidental facts must therefore be examined closely among these are that the paper trust on general principles wants reciprocity beaten the lumber trust spe cifically wants to save the 1.50 tariff on lumber which reciprocity will wine out patent insides factory busy side by side with these two salient facts there are to be considered these striking coincidences allen and graham who were paid by the trusts to work up anti-reci procity in the united states are now en gaged in the same test in canada through whidder graham a former resident of the dominion for fifteen years the conservative party in canada has struggled along without an issue or a campaign fund now it has both with annexation as the war cry there is money on all sides a certain alleged eews agency in montreal is working night and day lining out boiler plate or patent insides for the country newspapers the bi are filled with conservative ertising there is plenty of music hall posters and a good t for bringing out the vote on y b recalled that the examiner iu lispatch from washington point eral weeks ago that with abun y from the trust in the united fight here would be made on _ kaiser near wreck in royal train 30 are hurt few yards away crash startles passengers in royal j coach mistaken signal is the cause special cabla to the examiner berlin aug 28 the kaiser narrowly escaped being mixed up in a railroad ac cident last night while traveling from hamburg to stettin . when the royal train arrived at lue beck station at midnight it was held up for half an hour owing to a change of staff a mistake was made in signals causing an incoming train to crash at full speed into another train which was stand ing in the station only a few yards from the kaiser's special every one aboard the royal train was awakened by the crash and quickly leaped ont of bed the electric lights were switched on and inquiries made as to what had happened after satisfying himself that no one was seriously injured the kaiser ordered his special to proceed three carriages of the wrecked train were totally demolished and the thirty passengers occupying them were injured but there were no fatalities fire routs 200 guests morning blaze in furniture store ad joining hotel two hundred scantily clad guests of the new columbus hotel 1840 wabash avenue were driven in a panic to the streets at 1:30 o'clock this morning when flames de stroyed the rear of the l fish furniture company's building next door within a moment after the alarm was sounded the flames hnd swept through a large heap of excelsior stored on the second floor of the building and mounted toward the roof more than fifty women occupied rooms in the hotel several of them were assisted to the street by firemen one fireman , was slightly injured by falling glass | Chicago train is wrecked b & o flyer from new york jumps track near pittsburgh pittsburgh pa aug 28.-a west bound passenger train on the baltimore & ohio railroad which left new york early to-day for Chicago jumped the tracks at round bottom terrace forty miles east of pittsburgh the train consisted of a mail car a combination baggage and dynamo car three day coaches two pullmans and a dining car a special train carrying doc tors was sent from connellsville late to night w p calvert a mail clerk was cut a c dremer train electrician and w r doebler express messenger were injured the escape of the passengers from death or injury is most remarkable astor doesn't pay taxes suit filed to foreclose lien for 891 on new york property new york aug 28 a supreme court action to foreclose a hen for unpaid taxes amounting to 891 against john jacob astor was filed to-day the tenant of the property which ls located at one hundred and sixty-fourth street and jerome ave nue failed to pay the taxes the lease ex pired and the tx lien was sold to the tax lien company the property in question came into astor's hands as executor at his father's estate turkey's war head ill special cable to the examiner constantinople aug 28 shevkct pasha the minister of war is sick of what the sultan's physician has diagnosed to be intestinal catarrh another physician diag nosed the disease as cholera which has been prevailing here for some time mrs davy arrested again for taxi bill explaining worthless check j she talks of reopening divorce case just learned of decree pleads that she had right to draw on bank for allowance for the second time this year mrs nel lie l davy was arrested last night on a charge of failing to pay a taxicab bill her explanation of the tendering of a worthless check for her second ride in cluded the statement that she might at tempt to reopen a divorce case in which f d davy obtained a decree from judge pinckney on january 10 f d davy is an agency manager of the continental casualty company in chi cago according to mrs davy he is a member of the Chicago athletic colonial and south shore country clubs he lives at 1847 lawndale avenue mrs davy since her divorce has earned her living as a corset demonstrator husband obtained divorce although davy's divorce was granted january 10 his wife when arrested on january 23 on complaint of g d moore a taxicab owner said that she had been driving about in search of her husband and that their home was at 4028 calumet ave nue her arrest last night resulted from the s eturn marked no funds of a check for 10 she had given to the hoskins taxi service 50 east twentieth street mrs davy when locked up said that she had been allowed 10 a week alimony by her former husband and that she had been told to draw it by check from the colonial trust savings bank similar checks had been honored she said talks of reopening case i she said further that she had not learned until three weeks ago that her husband had obtained a divorce a friend told her she said she said she was out of the city when the decree was granted and talked of making an effort through her attorney george a trude to have the case re opened unless some more satisfactory ali mony arrangement could be made a con ference to this end would be held this morning she said between attorney trude and her husband mrs davy is a daughter of e w gordon a retired business man of oak park dr hirsch sees war peril chicagoan believes situation in ger many grave special cable to the examiner berlin aug 28 dr emil g hirsch of Chicago who has been spending his annual vacation in europe believes that europe is much nearer the verge of a great war than most people realize the atmos phere of berlin is charged with gunpow der said dr hirsch to-day there seems to be little confidence felt that the moroc can negotiations to be resumed here this week will amount to anything the ger mans seem to be more incensed at the brit ish than at the french the papers here reek with anglophobism i consider the situation grave miss barrymore in peril actress her husband and baby in auto accident bristol r 1 aug 28 russell c colt his wife ethel barrymore and their infant child samuel pomeroy colt nar rowly escaped injury in an automobile here when the forward axle of their tour ing car snapped tipping the car over the chauffeur applied the brake but the mo mentum caused the car to plow through the roadbed twenty-flve feet it stopped five feet from an electric pole pope receives officials recovery almost complete and sec retary leaves for vacation special cable to the examiner rome aug 28 pope pius to-day re ceived in audience cardinal vannutelll and the archbishop of yucatan his holiness having almost completely recovered his strength cardinal merry del val the papal secretary of state has left rome for a two-weeks vacation t a edison near death special cable to the examiner interlaken switzerland aug 28 that thomas a edison and his family narrowly escaped being dashed over an alpine precipice near the village of tou bois became known when the party arrived here to-night from geneva the driver of the inventor's automobile attempted to turn around on a narrow road while as cending a steep hill he lost control of the machine and it started down the in cline with the rear wheels on the very edge of a fifty-foot abyss the chauffeur managed to whirl the steering wheel about so as to arrest the car's progress boy 14 routs sluggers hammond ind aug 28 sluggers at tacked carpenters at work on a building southeast of the city and were repulsed by harry engl.ehardt aged fourteen years who was armed with a winchester re peater _ . _. 14 year-old girl foils a burglar choked in sleep makes him weep aided by bulldog brings help miss cheryl gaston miss cheryl gaston talking in sleep causes thief to think he's seen how a fourteen-year-old school miss dealt with a burglar reduced him to a state of tearfulness and then forced him to leave the ho-ise without appropriating even one article of value was the amazing story told by cheryl gaston daughter of mrs nellie dewey gaston 557 barry avenue yesterday . the young bandit entered the gaston ipartmeat at 2 o'clock sunday morning and there spent the most interesting thirty minutes of his life he himself was cool but he found that he was dealing with a spartan and he retired vanquished raffles and other bizarre stage bur glars will turn green with envy when thry read of the young bandit who had the effrontery to roll a cigarette before he re tired from the scene of his wonderful dep redations that is a fierce-looking english bulldog and a timid woman lodger enters into the story detracts nothing from the interest of the tale it should be stated first of all that cheryl talks in her sleep the gaston flat is on the ground floor at the corner of evanston and barry avenues th burglar chose cheryl's window to make his entrance he carefully removed the screen carried it half a block down the street and then stood in the dark bed room cheryl spoke and he thought he had been discovered without a moment's hesitation he grasped her by the throat then she was really wide awake but frighteued never you are choking me please let go of my throat she pleaded ail right if you will promise me that you wfll tot scream i will let you go said th gentleman burglar i promise said cheryl just then mike a big hrindle eng lish bulldog came rolling menacingly into the room if that dog bites me i will kill you chattered the bandit apprehensively i won't let htm said cheryl bravely and she put a reassuring â€¢ hand on towsci-'s head he wagged his stump of a tail and licked the burglar's grimy hand only women lodgers were in the hous the little girl knew that she had to think quickly and surely how could she raise au alarm then i thought 1 ought to get to the kitchen she iid telling her expert ence last night so i said i am so thirty i can hardly lireathe will you please get me a jrink of water sure you come to the kitchen refuses aid to boy maimed by her auto city-wide hunt for owner of the machine saio to be no 3507 Illinois the police are making a statewide search for a woman who refused aid to a boy whom her automobile had knocked down in the streets of Chicago late sunday night and who ordered her chauffeur to drive away after he had stopped the car and attempted to pick up the child the license number of the car was said to be 3507 Illinois this number was is sued to a john c fetzer of hoopeston john & fetzer of hinsdale who was at first said to be the owner of the automo bile said last night that his machine was not out of the garage at the time of the accident the victim of the accident was rhine hardt gresch seven years old 2818 chris tian avenue he was crossing the street at 2801 milwaukee avenue wheu an auto mobile driven at a tremendous rate of speed struck him before he was aware of his danger the chauffeur stopped his machine when he saw the boy go under the wheels he jumped to the pavement and went back to his victim's assistance the moment he picked up the lad a woman who was riding alone in the ton neau ordered him to return to the car let him remain where he is she screamed we have got to get out of this the driver climbed back into his ma chine put on full speed and disappeared before spectators could interfere the gresch boy was severely bruised and lacerated and internal injuries are feared -â– Â» , beattle confessed killing unknown swears cousin threat's kiel beulah binford unknown â€” ~ ~~~ b poor relation of a wealthy virginia^^sffh tells of buying gun for alleged skyeh and how the prisoner expressed xegrek for deed ; fear defendant kill selm the fatal words that may^send henry clay i beattie to the electric chair henry this looks kind of black for you mt paul beattie io his cousin henry the night of the tragedy i v i wish to god i hadn't done it i wouldn't 1 do it again for a million dollars â€” henry's reply to paul that same night he gave me a message he said go to her beulah binford and tell her that if she calls me up or opens her mouth or says anything about this affair i'll kill her if it takes me 100 years â€” paul's recital of what followed the confession of the murder girl for whom crime is said to have been done is i declared to have said now he'll marry me i mother of slain young woman says she knew j of husband's wrongdoings â€¢ i by j j o'neill chesterfield va aug 2s late in this stifling afternoon while s_fi . 1 persons crowded this tiny ancient room built to seat 100 henry clay 1 beattie jr on trial for his life sat with a sneer on his face watch _ ing his cousin paul beattle testifying against him j paul of the poor branch of the family had always been regarded as j an inferior person henry had many times used him as an errand boy and 1 him small sums of money paul is at times subject to epilepsy he is â– physically weak uncultured in all outward ways far below the rich youth m who is charged with having slain his wife for love of a prettier woman â– the much-talked-of beulah binford â„¢ nothing new had come from tie cousin's testimony he had told how he had been commissioned by his cousin henry to buy the shotgun with which henry's bride was slain â€” whie hwa sold he told of having delivered the weapon to his cousin â€” also old the audience fanned itself mopped its face and forehead with hand kerchiefs and listened in a bored sort of way state's attorney louis wen denberg droned along with questions which bothered neither the young de fendant nor his lawyers and excited neither spectators nor jurors they had read all this stuff in newspapers it was ancient history admission startles whole court and so you went on the night of the tragedy to henry beauie's house and met him on the porch inquired wendenberg quietly and you sal to him henry this looks kind of black for you well what did he say la reply " _ wish to god i hadn't done it â€” i wouldn't do it over again for a million dollars that's what he said sir replied paul as they caught the flrst half of the sentence every one in the courtroom stopped all motion as though suddenly petrified there was not a ware of a fan or a hat not a movement of a handkerchief the boy prisoner's face went as white as paper his fists doubled in a convulsive grip his lawyers the judge the jurors half started in their seats then halted in statue-like poses as the last half of the sentence was uttered the reaction jama them was a sound that is not quite describable â€” a sudden in-take of breathâ€”a sound just the opposite of a hiss if that wording can be understood â€” a gnat k gasp jfl then a man standing behind the little grand stand-like arrangement la m which the correspondents sit said quite aloud and quite unconsciously good god so henry if this is to be believed has confessed __â– his own lawyers apparently had not known of it nor had his irhiam haired father nor his brother douglas who sat beside him they iblsfl palm leaf fans to their faces none could tell what tears they shed w_fl emotions they expressed behind those screens 9 only henry himself failed to relax he remained rigid^h unmoving with his pale face and his clenched fist : nd his staring eyes directed straight before him then came second thunderbolt but that was not all there was in paul beattie's story lo cause breaths to jerk inward bodies to tauten in a mazed shock the calm ouiet lawyer for the state of virginia asked very soon and so you say he gave you a message to deliver did he paul yes sir â€” that night he gave me a message and what was it paul _ he said go to her beulah binford and tell her that if a she calls me up or opens her mouth or says anything about m this affair i'll kill her if it takes me 100 years " m first the confession of the killing then the admission that it wajft^p beulah binford surely the state was damning young henry clay beattie / more and more oniy one thing else was lacking that eoon came / and did you deliver that message paul / he delivei-ed it the boy said he went to beulah binford's housei but there were others about they dared not talk so he took her for _ short walk on the streets to tell her what h enry had said beulah binford's he'll marry me j and what did she say paul m why she said i reckon henry clay will marry me afterifl this right then in the opinion of all hearers the state of virginia migfl have rest case â€” right then when the young defendant tried to sqa again but showed only plain fright when half tha jurors sat tigh^b continued on 2 page 2d column j get the gold outn | of your newspaper read the examiner want ads and you will find hundreds of ways to get good bright round dollars out of them every want ad is printed for the convenience of at least two parties â€” the one who advertises and the person who seeks what is advertised > if there is anything lacking for your convenience such as a po sition or help for the home or office or 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